Preschoolers had a great Earth Day last week! Parent volunteers were key to making the day special: one parent volunteer talked about climate change and read “The Lorax” by Dr. Seuss to the class. Other parent volunteers stood by to demonstrate various ecological investigations for our students to explore: solar, wind and water energy stations, a water filtration station and germination station. It was a great week for students, parents and teachers!
Harker’s varsity boys volleyball team is on a serious tear this season. Here’s a great interview of the team on 49er CalHi Sports: https://youtu.be/FACLl1ULZIw?t=2906
KCBS Radio noted Harker sophomore Maria Teplova’s art is on display at the New Museum in Los Gatos
Each year, Harker students participate in a forum on the dangers of nuclear proliferation, often traveling to Japan to join adults addressing the questions in an international forum.
Harker Preschool teachers Nina Smith and Robyn Stone collaborated on a fascinating article about how children react to learning about pill bugs. https://issuu.com/caaeyc/docs/spring_19
Harker students performed very well at the Tournament of Champions last weekend. This prestigious speech and debate tournament, hosted by the University of Kentucky, is open to students who have performed well at varsity invitationals, and Harker qualified a number of students.
Junior Avi Gulati won first place in original oratory, an outstanding achievement! Senior Haris Hosseini was third in oratory, and Nikki Solanki, grade 11, was third in program oral interpretation. Senior Alycia Cary was in the semifinals of oratory. Additionally, Nakul Bajaj and David Feng, both grade 11, and Andrew Sun, grade 10, all made it to the semifinals of congressional debate.
Finally, Akshay Manglik, grade 10, and Sachin Shah, grade 11, qualified to compete in Lincoln-Douglas debate. Both junior Prerana Acharyya and Solanki (who qualified in two events!) qualified to compete in dramatic interpretation. It was thrilling for the whole team to see so many Harker Eagles do so well at the tournament!
The boys golf team fell to Valley Christian 227-210 before defeating Menlo 179-184 to become co-league champs, which gives the Eagles six straight league championship titles. Bryan Zhang, grade 10, shot a personal best 1-under-par 34 to earn his first career medalist honors. The Eagles will compete at the WBAL Championships on Wednesday.
Baseball
The Eagles started the week with a 10-8 non-league victory over Del Mar with Zach Hoffman, grade 12, and Max Lee, grade 11, each driving in two runs on two hits. The team then dropped a 2-7 matchup with Jefferson, with Levi Sutton and Nick Coulter, both grade 10, each driving in a run. Finally, the Eagles fell to Independence 4-5. This week, the team hosts Crystal Springs Uplands on Tuesday before traveling to South San Francisco on Thursday.
Boys Tennis
The boys tennis team lost its regular season matchup with Menlo 0-7 last week before starting the WBAL Individual Tournament. The doubles team of Ramanand Vegesna and Mihir Sharma, both grade 11, fell short in the doubles finals and hopes to make the CCS Doubles Championships as an at-large team. CCS begins this Friday.
Lacrosse
The lacrosse team defeated Salinas 16-9 and Carlmont 13-12 last week to improve to an impressive 11-3 on the season. The girls wrap up the regular season this week as they host Notre Dame Belmont on Tuesday before traveling to Woodside Priory on Thursday.
Track and Field
The WBAL Track and Field Championship begin on Tuesday with the finals on Friday.
Boys Volleyball
The boys volleyball team defeated Los Gatos 3-0 in its sole matchup last week. It’s a big week for the Eagles as they wrap up the regular season by facing off with league rival and top CCS team Monta Vista on Tuesday before Senior Night against Los Altos on Wednesday.
Swim
Harker swimmers competed at the WBAL Championships at Sacred Heart last week with some great results. Matthew Chung, grade 10, Rhys Edwards, grade 10, and Alex Yu, grade 12, went 1-2-7 in the 200 freestyle. Chung broke the 9-year-old WBAL record, smashing the old time by four seconds and qualifying for the state meet. Ihita Mandal, grade 12, made the consolation finals in the 200 free and dropped eight seconds off her time. Nikela Hulton, grade 9, placed sixth in the 200 IM, dropping six seconds from her time and later placed second in the 100 fly, making CCS cuts in both events. Nageena Singh, grade 9, placed seventh, making the finals in the 100 fly. Ethan Hu, grade 11, Chung, and Edwards went 1-2-3 in the 100 fly with Hu breaking his own 2018 WBAL record. Yu took first in the 500 free. Jason Kwok, grade 10, took first in the 100 breast. The CCS Championship trials begin on Friday.
Softball
The softball team lost to Pinewood 1-11 and The King’s Academy 2-18 last week. This week, the Eagles host Fremont on Monday and travel to Mercy SF on Tuesday.
Freshmen David Dai and Rishab Parthasarathy were recently selected to be two of 20 high school students on the 2019 U.S. Physics Team. Each year, the American Association of Physics Teachers selects team members from the top scorers on the USA Physics Exam, who are then invited to a boot camp at the University of Maryland, College Park. Five of these students will then be chosen for the traveling team for the International Physics Olympiad in Tel Aviv, Israel.
Five teams of Harker fourth and fifth graders were winners at The Tech Challenge, held March 30-31 at The Tech Museum of Innovation in downtown San Jose. The theme of the competition, “No Roads, No Problem,” challenged students to create a hovercraft that could traverse various terrains.
Get Teched – made up of fourth graders Risa Chokhawala, Rohan Goyal, Brandon Labio and Trisha Shivakumar – was one of three teams in the Grades 4-5 category to receive the Outstanding Overall award for best overall performance. Also winning Outstanding Overall was Donut Dogs, composed of fifth graders Janam Chahal, Sofia Shah, Brenna Ren and Ananya Pradhan, which also earned second place in the video contest.
Fourth graders Kamala Smith, Ameera Ramzan, Adrian Roufas and Nicholas Knauer – known collectively as Yes We KAAN – received the Outstanding Engineering Journal award, while Orange Duo, consisting of fourth graders Neel Kumar and Cole Uhlig, were presented with the Judges’ Inspiration Award. Best Teamwork went to the Hover Eagles, comprising fourth graders Orion Ghai, Samaara Patil, Nikhil Bawa and Aanya Mukherjee.
Five teams of Harker fourth and fifth graders were winners at The Tech Challenge, held March 30-31 at The Tech Museum of Innovation in downtown San Jose. The theme of the competition, “No Roads, No Problem,” challenged students to create a hovercraft that could traverse various terrains.
Get Teched – made up of fourth graders Risa Chokhawala, Rohan Goyal, Brandon Labio and Trisha Shivakumar – was one of three teams in the Grades 4-5 category to receive the Outstanding Overall award for best overall performance. Also winning Outstanding Overall was Donut Dogs, composed of fifth graders Janam Chahal, Sofia Shah, Brenna Ren and Ananya Pradhan, which also earned second place in the video contest.
Fourth graders Kamala Smith, Ameera Ramzan, Adrian Roufas and Nicholas Knauer – known collectively as Yes We KAAN – received the Outstanding Engineering Journal award, while Orange Duo, consisting of fourth graders Neel Kumar and Cole Uhlig, were presented with the Judges’ Inspiration Award. Best Teamwork went to the Hover Eagles, comprising fourth graders Orion Ghai, Samaara Patil, Nikhil Bawa and Aanya Mukherjee.
Five teams of Harker fourth and fifth graders were winners at The Tech Challenge, held March 30-31 at The Tech Museum of Innovation in downtown San Jose. The theme of the competition, “No Roads, No Problem,” challenged students to create a hovercraft that could traverse various terrains.
Get Teched – made up of fourth graders Risa Chokhawala, Rohan Goyal, Brandon Labio and Trisha Shivakumar – was one of three teams in the Grades 4-5 category to receive the Outstanding Overall award for best overall performance. Also winning Outstanding Overall was Donut Dogs, composed of fifth graders Janam Chahal, Sofia Shah, Brenna Ren and Ananya Pradhan, which also earned second place in the video contest.
Fourth graders Kamala Smith, Ameera Ramzan, Adrian Roufas and Nicholas Knauer – known collectively as Yes We KAAN – received the Outstanding Engineering Journal award, while Orange Duo, consisting of fourth graders Neel Kumar and Cole Uhlig, were presented with the Judges’ Inspiration Award. Best Teamwork went to the Hover Eagles, comprising fourth graders Orion Ghai, Samaara Patil, Nikhil Bawa and Aanya Mukherjee.
Some Harker preschoolers had big smiles yesterday, as they enjoyed a lesson on dental hygiene from one of our parents, Dr. Becky Gong, D.D.S. Students learned why it’s important to go to the dentist, how much toothpaste to use, how long and how often to brush one’s teeth, how cavities are formed and much more. The students even got to practice their own tooth-brushing skills on a dinosaur friend. Furthermore, every child was given a bag of dental goodies to take home. It is wonderful to have parents come share their expertise with the students!
The 2019 middle school Green Team – sixth graders Summer Adler, Natalie Liu, Genieve Malinen and Claire Zhao – has been hard at work this year advocating for the end of single-use plastics and an increase in recycling of all plastic waste. Because much of our plastic waste ends up in the ocean, the team is concerned with the effects on marine life, from sea birds filling their stomachs – and those of their babies – with indigestible plastic and dying of malnutrition, to fish who mistake tiny bits of colored microplastics as their natural food source, to sea turtles and whales becoming entangled in plastic waste. The team has worked hard to learn about and share with their friends the effects of human activity on the planet’s ecosystems.
In addition to creating inspirational posters and displaying them at the middle school campus, the team participated in the nationwide Plastic Film Recycling Challenge, collecting and recycling more than 300 pounds of plastic film during the five-month challenge. The Green Team managed to increase the middle school community’s recycling of a material difficult to process by waste haulers and recyclers, and effectively communicated the importance of recycling to their fellow students, families, faculty and staff – who all participated in the team’s plastic film collection.
With Earth Day in mind, the Green Team learned more about Earth’s marine environments and the important role that healthy coral plays in maintaining these ecosystems. With a healthy coral reef being the backbone of a thriving ocean, they further discovered the surprising impact that sunscreen has had on the planet’s oceans and that the toxic ingredients oxybenzone and octinoxate have adversely affected coral reefs by poisoning fish, sea urchins, shrimp and baby corals. Widespread coral distress and reef bleaching has been a significant global consequence.
The team shared this information about sunscreen and its effects at the 2019 Earth Day celebration on April 19. The entire student body also participated in an extended advisory meeting that focused on protecting coral reefs globally. They took part in a letter writing campaign that petitioned the FDA to ban oxybenzone and octinoxate in sunscreens nationwide. They further learned that switching to reef-safe sunscreen has a huge impact on coral reef health and were given free reef-safe clear zinc sunscreen sticks at the Green Team’s Earth Day booth, generously donated by Babo Botanicals.
The inspirational story behind Babo Botanicals’ founder is evidenced by her passion for healthy marine ecosystems, beekeeping, sustainable agriculture, nutrition and teaching. A graduate of Harvard, Kate Solomon developed Babo Botanicals with children and families in mind. We are very grateful for the company’s sunscreen donation and the opportunity has provided to share the importance of using reef-safe sunscreens with students and families.
Green Team members have shown their passion for a healthy planet and truly gotten their hands dirty by learning about and maintaining a compost bin on campus, growing vegetables from seeds and replanting the beautiful Harker “H” garden by the school entrance. Maintaining both the flower garden and vegetable patch will be the team’s focus for the remainder of the school year, while continuing to campaign against single-use plastics.